{"id":2574,"date":"2019-03-11T11:19:58","date_gmt":"2019-03-11T10:19:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fairfood.org\/?p=2574"},"modified":"2021-06-28T18:24:30","modified_gmt":"2021-06-28T16:24:30","slug":"foodpact-4-our-responsibility-to-the-workers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fairfood.org\/en\/resources\/foodpact-4-our-responsibility-to-the-workers\/","title":{"rendered":"Foodpact 4: our responsibility to the workers"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
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Foodpact 4: our responsibility to the workers<\/h1>\n\n\n\n
At Fairfood, we love good food. We\u2019d also like the people who produced our food to be able to afford a proper meal. Doesn\u2019t sound like a very big deal, right? Yet it seems to be. In this new blog series, we\u2019re investigating why and, more importantly: how we can solve this<\/strong>. This time: our responsibility to the workers<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Tea is not something I have delved too deeply into \u2013 I\u2019m more of a coffee drinker myself. But after an afternoon with Faiham, I must admit I was chiding myself over how little I knew. Faiham Ebna Sharif is a photographer and researcher based in Bangladesh who has been photographing tea workers in the Sylhet region of Bangladesh for the past three and a half years as part of his Cha Chakra: tea tales of Bangladesh<\/em> project.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Faiham\u2019s relationship with tea has been a long one. As a child, the staff at his school came from the tea workers\u2019 community and the school was surrounded on one side by tea fields. As an adult, his interest in the lives of tea workers grew. \u201cOnce I went to the tea garden as a journalist\u201d, Faiham tells me. \u201cAnd I found the hardship and at the same time an interesting link between the tea drinking culture and the life of the workers, which is mostly unknown to people. Then I thought I would love to tell the story.\u201d Faiham is providing the outside world with an honest glimpse into the lives of these tea workers. He approaches his work in an ethnographic way \u2013 living, eating and sleeping with a family from the community. In this way he is able to connect with the community on a deeper and more organic level, and connect the workers\u2019 lives to consumers in Bangladesh and the rest of the world.<\/p>\n\n\n\n